Dannagal Goldthwaite Young is an American scholar. She is a professor of communication and political science at the University of Delaware and Director of the university's Center for Political Communication.[1][2][3][4]
She earned her Ph.D. from University of Pennsylvania in 2007. She studied the effects of political satire on viewers' attitudes and behaviors and developed the "counterargument disruption model of political humor" to explain how humor reduces audience resistance to persuasive messages. [5][6] Her 2020 book, Irony and Outrage: The Polarized Landscape of Rage, Fear, and Laughter in the United States argues that liberals and conservatives prefer to create and consume different political aesthetics (e.g.; liberal ironic satire versus conservative outrage programming) due to underlying differences in the psychological traits of liberals and conservatives.[7] Her 2023 book, Wrong: How Media, Politics, and Identity Drive our Appetite for Misinformation argues that social identity creates people's demand for identity-reinforcing misinformation. Wrong suggests that in the U.S., political mega-identities were cultivated by America's racial history (in particular following the Southern Strategy, Great Migration (African American) and party realignment of the late 1960s (see Sixth Party System), and later rewarded and reinforced by the profit motives of America's fragmented political media system.[8]
Young, Dannagal Goldthwaite (2020). Irony and Outrage. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN978-0-19-091308-3..[17][18][19]
Young, Dannagal Goldthwaite (October 17, 2023). Wrong: How Media, Politics, and Identity Drive Our Appetite for Misinformation. Baltimore: JHU Press. ISBN978-1-4214-4775-9. [20]
As editor
Young, Dannagal G.; Gray, Jonathan, eds. (2013), Breaking Boundaries: In Political Entertainment Studies, USC Annenberg Press, ISBN978-1-62517-175-7
Boatright, Robert G.; Shaffer, Timothy J.; Sobieraj, Sarah; Young, Dannagal Goldthwaite, eds. (2019). A Crisis of Civility?: Political Discourse and Its Discontents. New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN978-1-351-05196-5.[21]
^Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Radio National (June 2, 2020), Conspiracy theories and me, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, archived from the original on June 30, 2024, retrieved June 30, 2024